Thanks for the welcome, but don’t horse...
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Thanks for the welcome, but don’t horse around
Thank you for your article on July 17, the “New neighbors”
regarding the annexed part of Santa Ana Heights. You featured a photo
of my daughter, Olivia, on her white pony with some other local kids
riding behind her on the Cypress Street bridle trail. It is for the
benefit of all the children from this neighborhood that I am writing
this letter. The majority of the horses that exist in our area are
the beloved pets of young people.
Urbanization has closed in around this Newport-Mesa neighborhood.
This puts our children and their pets in a constant contact with the
elements of urbanization. These elements are considered “obstacles”
in the horse’s environment. Due to the horse’s instinctive nature,
totally acclimating the horse to these fearsome obstacles is often
not possible. OK, so they’re not the smartest animals.
To give some insight to our human neighbors and ease our
interactions, it is with the utmost respect that I make some requests
with regard to safe trail and road etiquette when in the presence of
a horsy neighbor. First, please understand that one horse on your
car’s windshield will ruin your whole month. You know how hard it is
to get splattered bugs off the front of your car. Just add a thousand
pounds of solid horse to that, and well, you get my drift. While it
may look to you from your vehicle like that horse is calmly walking
along, that can change in the flick of a tail. You might not see the
growling loose dog bounding forward or hear the unobservant gardener
with a leaf blower coming at the horse from the other side. Please,
heads up, slow down, and give the horse a wide berth. Recognize that
you are sharing the same path, for one moment, with another vehicle
not made of steel but of flesh, and with another human that is not
wrapped in a metal cage for protection.
Next, remember that saying about “not walking behind a horse?”
Please don’t run, bike or push your baby stroller up right behind or
at the head of a horse. This is seen as a personal threat to the
horse and equestrians (horseman) see it to be downright dangerous
(not to mention rude). Again, a wide berth is recommended, as kids
riding on anything and horses are both unpredictable creatures. More
so the kids in this case. Also, not all horses will love your dog.
Dogs are meat eaters. Horses are meat, get it?
Lastly, since 1985, a riding arena has been in the specific plan
for this area. The site is designated, the design is complete, the
monies are earmarked, and still we wait. Born and raised here, the
girl on the white horse in the photo will leave for college next
year. Every year of her life, “officials” gave her and her horse the
promise of that riding arena being built. Other younger riders still
have need for that arena. They need it now.
It is with this letter that I encourage the new powers that be to
pick up the reins, mount up and spur this arena project to
completion. The Back Bay Equestrian Group is available to aid any way
we can. Heck, we’ll even give you a blue ribbon and a silver cup if
you can get it done.
Note: Don’t panic -- it’s organic! Nothing new ever sprouted out
of a road apple; it dries up and dissolves too fast. However, the
equestrian group, in a community-funded effort, has hired someone to
pick up droppings along the trail.
LISA CLEMENT
Santa Ana Heights
Costa Mesa not in touch with quality of life
I agree with Eric Bever and his article regarding his
interpretation of what we pretend regarding quality of life in Costa
Mesa (“Quality of life the issue with Santa Ana River bridges,”
Tuesday). The term quality has been selectively used with our city
planners. It is like making a planning conclusion first, then later
getting the data to fit the conclusion. This type of pre-selective
planning is quite evident through out the city and resembles the
thinking process of the city staff and planning department.
Quality of life as a term, I admit, is hard to define and measure.
Is it the increase in traffic? Is it the air we breathe? Is it the
noise that we hear? Or is it what the city staff think must be good
for the citizens?
Most of the quality of life issues and findings as defined by the
city staff folks are subjectively measured, and it is up to the
planner to decide the effects. Currently, all the planner has to do
is to mark one column versus another column in his finding report.
This finding hardly requires factual data, and even if data is
required, they use assumption versus hard facts.
Lets evaluate Harbor Boulevard, for example. Three years ago, the
planners claimed there was no potential increase in traffic due to
the Target Center development, no change whatsoever from the old
Fedco. And for that, they did not add traffic impact dollar fees to
the developer or reduce the size of the development. Now thereafter,
the project is done, the city claimed otherwise and now the past
claim has been changed.
Why? Because now they are asking for Measure M money to fix Harbor
and Gisler Avenue and the added associated traffic.
So the story goes: You have to follow the money, not the quality
of life.
It would be interesting to compare notes before and after
regarding the Target Center. What did the city planners originally
recommend, and what was their data of assumption? The study should
address the total cumulative effect. All past and present data is a
matter of public records. Let’s compare the environmental report as
was it was provided three years ago versus and against the true
actual as it is now. It would be interesting to compare the
assumptions that were made versus actual as related to the quality of
life issues. Then let the citizens at large be the judge. The final
truth should come out.
Ironically, the quality of life issues is like having a fox in
charge of the chicken. The fox is the money (sales tax revenue) and
the chicken is the quality of life. The question is: do we get few
million dollars in revenue versus few property tax dollars from
residents. What are the choices?
It appears that the residents keep blaming our elected City
Council members for the bad deed in the city. This was evident by the
latest election and the change of the guards. What we need is to
realize the symptoms versus the real problem. We need to start to
measure and hold the city staff accountable as well our elected City
Council. We need to measure city staff performance for their
recommendation and their actions. We need to compare pre-assumptions
and recommendation to current actual. The Triangle Square development
is a case in point. The city used public domain to acquire the
property. What went wrong with this development? Most of the city
staffers who were part of the Triangle Square development, including
our city manager, are still employed with the city.
Quality of life, what we want. We all want the best for us,
including the best for our future generation and the best for our
children. Look around you. Do you think that the city of Costa Mesa
can become better place? I believe there is a lot of room for
improvements. We need to question our local government officials
about their actions and review their performance. America is the land
of the free and the home of the brave.
AL MORELLI
Costa Mesa
A fine straightening of the record
Thanks to our outstanding city manager, Homer Bludau, for setting
the facts straight in his July 19 “Community Commentary” concerning a
recent letter from Greenlight spokesman Phil Arst on city budget
issues. Arst and Greenlight seem like Don Quixote thrusting at
imaginary issues with the motto: “Having lost sight of our
objectives, we re-doubled our efforts.”
Too bad, but thanks to the Daily Pilot for helping folks know the
real facts.
ALAN W. SILCOCK
President, West Newport Beach Assn.
Newport Beach
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